88 I ... lin won I or OP lin world .- . . .... ... '-' 'J " , ..J;. .;. ---- ...- - ...- - _,,_. _'<; t' -- ;';"'1" 1 " "" -- 1'" -.; >,..-: . - "" - , - - '; ""'\ f - --,;r. ;... " b-- , .<- It .. ..,..,..,..... 1 " I I I ..., CENTRAL AMERICA Thousands of years ago the Maya built Tikal, and with it a great civilization. Then mysteriously they left. Their massive temples still stand today, towering 21 stories above the forest floor. Silent Fascinating. Come discover Tikal . . . and so much more In Guatemala For further information, contact your travel agent or mail the coupon today. r----------------------------------- 1 I l' GUATEMALA TOURIST COMMISSION I I. II 929 Sunnse lane Ft Lauderdale FL 33304 I I . Telephone (305) 565..1828 I I .z. '- '- r Please send me your colorful literature on Guatemala I f Name I I Address I I I I " I City I I GUATEMALA 0 tat _ _ ZIP _ _ I L___________________________________ SEPTEMDER I 7 , I 9 7 formed, a sketch of a man. I told Doris unselfishness and generosity and concern for others would ease most pain, even her pain; it would make her feel better. God, how she screamed. She said that I came from filthy people and what I was was more filth, that I came from the scum of the earth and was more scum. Each thing she said struck her with its aptness and truth and inspired her and goaded her to greater anger. She threw an ashtray at me. She ordered me out of the house: "Sleep in the streets, sleep in the gutter, where you belong!" Her temper as- tounded me. Where did she get the strength for such temper when she was so ill? I did not fight back. My for- bearance or patience or politeness or whatever it was upset her stilJ more. I didn't catch on to this until in the mid- dle of calling me names ("-you little bastard, you hate everybody, you're dIS- gusting, I can't stand you, you little son of a bitch-" "Momma. . . Come on, now, Momma. . .") she screamed, "Why do you do things and make me ashamed " It was a revelation. It meant my selfishness would calm her. At first I said, "Do you really want me to go? You'll he alone here." I was partly sarcastic, laughing at her in that way, and then I begdn muttering, or saying with stubborn authority that I would not leave, I wanted my comfort con- sidered, I wanted her to worry about my life. She said, huffing and gasping but less yellow and pinched and ex- " Y ' . 1 d b " I treme, ou re a SpOI e rat. mean she was calmed to some extent; she was red uced to being incensed from being insane. But she screamed still. And I kept on too: I did not care what grounds she used-it could be on the grounds of my selfishness-but I was really stubborn: I was determined that she try being a good woman. I remember being so tense at my pre- \ sumption that I kept thinking some- thing physical in me would fail, would burst through my skin-my nerves, or mv blood, my heart, everything was pounding, or my brain, but anyway that particular fight ended sort of in a draw, with Doris insulted and exhaust- ed, appalled at what I'd said. At the stupidity. But with rpe adamant. I couldn't have stopped myself actually. After that, with my shoulders hunched and my eyes on the ground or occasionally wide open and innocent for inspection and fixed on her-I referred to her alwavs dS brave and generous. I dealt with her as if she was the most generous woman imaginable, as if she